ABSTRACT

The Soviet Union and Eastern Europe provide unique examples of large-scale relatively highly developed centrally planned economies. In the 1980s economists in both the East and West began to focus with increasingly critical attention on the economies of the Soviet Bloc, in an attempt to explain why they were performing so poorly in comparison with the economies of the Western powers and the capitalist countries of South-East Asia.

First published in 1988 this substantial and innovative contribution to the critical literature on the economies of the former Soviet bloc is unusual in that its author is equally familiar with both Western and Eastern sources.  It highlights, in particular, a discrepancy between the behaviour of individuals in Soviet-style economies and that expected of agents in a market system. It proceeds to outline how the consequent discordance between microeconomic practice and macroeconomic planning generates fundamental economic distortions.

part |69 pages

Part One The Distorted Macroeconomics of Central Planning

chapter |35 pages

1 Quantities

chapter |32 pages

2 Prices

part |61 pages

Part Two The Distorted Structure of Soviet-type Economies

chapter |26 pages

3 The Overgrown Industrial Sector

chapter |33 pages

4 Peculiarities of Intra-Industry Change

part |72 pages

Part Three Soviet-type Economies and the World Market

chapter |7 pages

Conclusion